New deep space images of distant strip of sky to be available on Google

A global project to map a distant strip of the universe is releasing its
data today to scientists and the public to be used as part of Google
Sky, a new feature of Google Earth.

The international team is taking deep images of an area of sky known as
the Extended Groth Strip, an area that covers the width of four full
moons, close to the end of the Big Dipper's handle.

The All-wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS) is
observing the same region of the sky in the radio, infrared, visible,
ultraviolet and X-ray regions of the electromagnetic spectrum, with the
goal of achieving a greater understanding of the evolution of galaxies
over the last 10 billion years.

Academics from Imperial College London, part of the global team, have
used the NASA satellite telescope Chandra to take deep images of the
area to detect highly energetic X-ray radiation from objects in the sky.

"We are looking back to a time when the universe was more than half its
current age and when galaxies were forming most of their stars," says
Professor Kirpal Nandra, from the Department of Physics and who is
leading the project from Imperial. He added: "With the X-ray images we
are looking at black holes, which are at the centre of galaxies, to try
to work out how the growth of black holes is linked to the growth of the
galaxy itself."

Dr Elise Laird, also at Imperial and one of the lead researchers on the
X-ray project, added: "Some theoretical models predict that black holes
can actually stop galaxies forming stars altogether. We're now starting
to test these models seriously using the AEGIS data."

Images in the optical, infrared and ultraviolet spectrum measure the
sizes and shapes of galaxies, their current rates of star formation and
the total number of stars each galaxy has already formed.

In the objects seen by Chandra, X-ray radiation has been produced when
gas is spiralling into a super massive black hole, like those believed
to lie at the centre of almost every galaxy. Many of the X-ray emitting
objects lie buried within otherwise normal-looking galaxies. In these
X-ray images, the bluest objects are the ones most obscured by gas
within their host galaxies.

The AEGIS region has now been surveyed more intensively and with more
telescopes than any other region of the sky. All the images will form
part of Google Sky, launched earlier this year and will further research
into galaxies and how they are formed.

Professor Nandra, explains why they are focusing on this particular area
of sky: "It all started in the early days of the Hubble Space Telescope
with a program to image a strip of the sky to look for distant galaxies.
Over the last few years this has snowballed into a huge international
project using the world's most powerful telescopes, both on the ground
and in space."

He added: "We've worked hard to convince the rest of the scientific
community that this is the best place to look at the evolution of
galaxies, and now this hard work's really paying off."

Google Sky will now include data from teams from around the world
including Imperial College, University of California, Berkeley,
University of California, Santa Cruz, the Space Telescope Science
Institute, the W.M. Keck Observatory, Harvard Smithsonian Centre for
Astrophysics and the California Institute of Technology.

Users can pan and zoom around all of these pictures of the sky to select
individual galaxies for closer inspection. This is the first time that
there have been multi wavelength images of the sky released in Google
Sky. To view the Google Earth Gallery please visit:
http://earth.google.com/gallery/index.html

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Notes to editors:

About Imperial College London

Imperial College London - rated as the world's ninth best university in
the 2006 Times Higher Education Supplement University Rankings - is a
science-based institution with a reputation for excellence in teaching
and research that attracts 11,500 students and 6,000 staff of the
highest international quality.

Innovative research at the College explores the interface between
science, medicine, engineering and management and delivers practical
solutions that improve quality of life and the environment - underpinned
by a dynamic enterprise culture.

With 66 Fellows of the Royal Society among our current academic staff
and distinguished past members of the College including 14 Nobel
Laureates and two Fields Medallists, Imperial's contribution to society
has been immense. Inventions and innovations include the discovery of
penicillin, the development of holography and the foundations of fibre
optics. This commitment to the application of our research for the
benefit of all continues today with current focuses including
interdisciplinary collaborations to tackle climate change and
mathematical modelling to predict and control the spread of infectious
diseases.

The College's 100 years of living science will be celebrated throughout
2007 with a range of events to mark the Centenary of the signing of
Imperial's founding charter on 8 July 1907.

The AEGIS Survey is targeted on a special area of the sky called the
Extended Groth Strip, that has been observed with the world's most
powerful telescopes on the ground and in space, from X-rays to radio
waves.

The AEGIS collaboration has been supported by the National Science
Foundation and NASA. It is an international collaboration which involves
nearly 100 scientists from 16 institutions in Europe, North America and
Asia.

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